Friday, April 5, 2013

OK, I admit it.I’m a
terrible blogger, completely devoid of the tenacity required to keep up with
regular posts.In fact, I owe my few
faithful readers a number of backdated posts, on Newfoundland (three years
ago!), several posts on my last year and a half in Leysin, last summer’s
mountaineering in Central Asia, my Christmas swing through Togo and Benin, this trip to the Maldives, and a few assorted posts from here and
there.With my energy somewhat restored
by a few days of sloth, diving, good food, snorkeling and general relaxation here
in the Maldives, I think it’s time for an update, but I’m going to start with a
very brief one.

The Maldives, where Terri and I arrived a few days ago in an
almost last-minute decision to flee the dying winter and unpromising ski
touring outlook, is the 112th country I have visited in my life, not
counting my home country of Canada.Of
course, exactly what constitutes a country is a bit slippery.My well-travelled friend Natalya Marquand holds that the only objective list is the 193 permanent members of the UN.Others hold that these
countries, plus the non-UN-member Vatican City, make up the 194 canonical
countries of the world. I think the
reality is a bit slippier.When I
visited Nagorno-Karabakh and Abkhazia, despite the fact that these countries
aren’t universally recognized, I had to get a visa to visit them and cross at a
border post manned by people in uniform who stamped my passport.Somaliland not only has its own consulates
and border guards, it even has its own currency.And, to take an extreme example, anyone who
claims that Taiwan isn’t effectively an independent country isn’t really recognizing
what’s been de facto the case since 1949.

So my list of independent countries is a bit bigger than
194.It’s about 204 countries; the
number may fluctuate a bit, and it doesn’t include three countries (Western
Sahara, Palestine and Tibet) with pretty legitimate cases but without their own
border guards. One of the many lists of countries on Wikipedia
lists 206 entries that either are recognized by at least one other
state as being independent, or effectively control a permanently
populated territory, but they include Western Sahara and Palestine which are at the moment illusory pipe dreams, to the distress of the people who inhabit them.

Anyway, without further preamble, here’s my list of the
countries I have visited, arranged according to the date I first visited
them.The non-UN/Vatican members of the
list are coloured red; there are eight of them,
so if you’re counting by the UN+Vatican list, it’s 104 (out of 194).I would make it 112 out of 204. Whichever way you count it, I’m now over
half-way to my goal of visiting them all, and my to-visit list is now down into double digits.

1969

1. US

1977

2.France

3.Switzerland

4.Liechtenstein

5.Germany

6.Netherlands

1981

7.Tanzania

1982

8.Norway

9.Italy

1988

10.UK

11. Vatican

12.Greece

13.Hungary

14.Austria

15.Czech Republic
(Prague, then part of the now-defunct Czechoslovakia)

1990

16.Belgium

17.Monaco

18.Poland

1991

19.Australia

20.New Zealand

21.Fiji

22.Cook Islands

1994

23.Egypt

24.Turkey

1995

25.Spain

26.Kenya

27.Uganda

28.Democratic
Republic of Congo

29.Japan

30.Singapore

31.Indonesia

1996

32.Philippines

33.Malaysia

34.Thailand

35.Cambodia

36.Nepal

1997

37.India

38.Sri Lanka

39.Pakistan

40.Luxembourg

41.San Marino

42.Andorra

1998

43.China

44.Portugal

45.Morocco

46.Tunisia

47.Jordan

1999

48.Israel

49.Syria

50.Lebanon

51.Chile

52.Argentina

53.Peru

2000

54.Bolivia

55.South Korea

2001

56.Mexico

57.Brunei

58.Laos

59.Taiwan

2004

60.Kazakhstan

61.Kyrgyzstan

62.Tajikistan

63.Uzbekistan

64.Turkmenistan

65.Iran

66.Bahrain

2006

67.Vietnam

68.Burma

2007

69.Mongolia

70.Palau

71.Bangladesh

2008

72. Bhutan

73.Cyprus

74.Northern Cyprus

2009

75.Kuwait

76.Azerbaijan

77.Georgia

78.Armenia

79.Nagorno-Karabakh

80.Iraq

81.Bulgaria

82.Serbia

83.Kosovo

84.Macedonia

85.Albania

86.Montenegro

87.Bosnia-Hercegovina

88.Croatia

89.Libya

90.Malta

2010

91.Ethiopia

92. Somaliland

93.Djibouti

2011

94.Denmark

95.Abkhazia

96.Russia

97.Ukraine

98.Trans-Dniestria

99.Moldova

100. Romania

101.Slovakia

102.Belarus

103.Lithuania

104.Latvia

105.Estonia

106.United Arab
Emirates

107.Oman

108.Qatar

2012

109.Slovenia

110.Togo

111.Benin

2013

112.Maldives

The next country in line is Iceland, set up for this
summer.I’m hoping to clean up my
European to-do list over the next 18 months:Ireland, Sweden, Finland and (I hope) South Ossetia.Then Madagascar awaits a long, leisurely
exploration, and my long-awaited African road trip should polish off almost all
the outstanding African countries and take me into the 150s.A couple of more trips, through Central America and northern South America, and another one through the Caribbean, would finish a lot of the remainder. Then comes the hardest part:finishing off the stragglers, many of them either
dangerous (Afghanistan), expensive and annoying (North Korea) or hard to get to
(Pacific islands).But what would be the
fun if it were too easy?